Santal, Satar in Bangladesh

Introduction / History
The Munda-Santal of northeastern India and Nepal are comprised of nine different, but very closely related people groups. They are distributed politically throughout the states of Bihar, West Bengal, and Orissa, India. Most of the tribes live in the hilly areas of the Chotanagpur Plateau, located in southern Bihar. Others prefer living in the plains. Beyond this region, they have spread widely throughout India as agricultural and industrial laborers. 

The seven groups who occupy territory farther north include the Santal (of India and Nepal), the Bhumij, the Koda, the Mahili, the Ho, and the Agariya. The two remaining groups, the Juango and the Gadaba, are located in the southern portion of India, nearer to the coast of the Bay of Bengal. The native language of the Munda-Santal, called Munda, belongs to the Austro-Asiatic language family. 

Tribal culture among the Munda-Santal is quickly changing under the impact of external influences such as industrialization, new communication links, tribal welfare schemes, and community development projects.

People Name GeneralSantal
People Name in CountrySantal, Satar
Population in Bangladesh643,000
World Population8,107,600
Total Countries4
IndigenousYes
Progress Scale
UnreachedNo
Frontier People GroupNo
GSEC6  (per PeopleGroups.org)
Pioneer Workers Needed
Alternate NamesHor, Majhi, Santhal, Satar, Sattar, संताल
People ID14743
ROP3 Code108674
Primary LanguageBengali (234,000 speakers)
Language Codeben   Ethnologue Listing
Language WrittenYes   ScriptSource Listing
Total Languages8
Secondary Languages
Santhali 
178,000
Sadri, Oraon 
100,000
Sylheti 
48,000
Odia 
5,500
Chittagonian 
2,100
Bishnupuriya 
600
Assamese 
300
Other People GroupsSpeaking Bengali
What Are Their Beliefs?
The Munda-Santal tribes tend to preserve their own beliefs, values, and separate identity. In all of the groups, most are Hindus, while the others practice ethnic religions. 

In Don Richardson's "Eternity In Their Hearts," we learn about their ancient God called Thakur Jiu, or "Genuine God." They thought that He had forgotten them because they had turned away from Him in fear of the Maran Buru, or "spirits of the great mountains." Their ancestors had made an oath with the Maran Buru when migrating to their present lands. They began to practice spirit appeasement, sorcery, and sun worship. 

Today, their supreme god is the sun god. However, they have also adopted the Hindu deities in addition to tribal gods and goddesses. The Hindu village priest is the ritual specialist, and they observe many Hindu festivals. They do have a firm belief in an almighty creator and also in "mother earth."

What Are Their Needs?
In places where the Gospel is being preached to the Munda-Santal, the listeners almost immediately receive after the village council talks it over. These precious tribes are ripe unto harvest; they simply need people to show them the way to the true God!

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